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Photography Q&A
High ISO & File Format question
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<blockquote data-quote="Joseph Bautsch" data-source="post: 27473" data-attributes="member: 654"><p>The D200 does well up to ISO 400. Above that you start getting visible noise. Your 50mm f/1.8 should give you good results at ISO 400. Your 18-70mm used at f/3.5 should also give you good shots but I would use a monopod for slower shutter speeds. When shooting through glass shoot as close to the glass as you can and at as sharp an angle as you can. This will help eliminate reflections of yourself and other people getting in the shots, unless you want them there. Shoot everything in RAW. That will give you a lot more room for post processing. Noise is mostly a function of the camera sensor, and the ISO you are using and how how big the enlargements will be made. Shooting in RAW won't reduce noise as opposed to shooting in Jpeg.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Joseph Bautsch, post: 27473, member: 654"] The D200 does well up to ISO 400. Above that you start getting visible noise. Your 50mm f/1.8 should give you good results at ISO 400. Your 18-70mm used at f/3.5 should also give you good shots but I would use a monopod for slower shutter speeds. When shooting through glass shoot as close to the glass as you can and at as sharp an angle as you can. This will help eliminate reflections of yourself and other people getting in the shots, unless you want them there. Shoot everything in RAW. That will give you a lot more room for post processing. Noise is mostly a function of the camera sensor, and the ISO you are using and how how big the enlargements will be made. Shooting in RAW won't reduce noise as opposed to shooting in Jpeg. [/QUOTE]
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